I know these godlike men all too well: they want one to have faith in them, and doubt to be sin. All too well I also know which they have most faith. Verily, it is not in afterworlds and redemptive drops of blood, but in the body, that they too have most faith; and their body is to them their thing-in-itself. But a sick thing it is to them their thing-in-itself. But a sick thing it is to them, and gladly would they shed their skins. Therefore, they listen to the preachers of death and themselves preach afterworlds.
Listen rather, my brothers, to the voice of the healthy body; that is a more honest and pure voice: More honestly and purely speaks the healthy body that is perfect and perpendicular: and it speaks of the meaning of the earth. — On Otherworldly, Thus Spoke Zarathrrusta, translated by Walter Kaufmann
.Of all that is written I love only that which one writes with his blood.
Write with blood, and you will experience that blood is spirit.
It is not easily possible to understand the blood of another: I hate the
reading idlers.
Whoever knows the reader will do nothing more for the reader. One
more century of readers – and the spirit itself will stink.
That everyone is allowed to learn to read ruins not only writing in the
long run, but thinking too.
Once the spirit was God, then it became human and now it is even
becoming rabble.
Whoever writes in blood and proverbs does not want to be read, but to
be learned by heart.
[Zarathustra, "Reading and Writing"]
Everything that is profound loves the mask [Beyond Good and Evil, 40]
I can't access that website. Which translator is it?
— Tate
That's odd. Translated by Adrian Del Caro, edited by Del Caro and Robert Pippin — Fooloso4
Book discussions are difficult to carry out in this forum. — Paine
Is that the translator you prefer? — Tate
Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it. — Amity
Like thee must I GO DOWN, as men say, to whom I shall descend. — Amity
Behold! I am weary of my wisdom, like a bee that has gathered too
much honey. I need hands that reach out. — Amity
Like you, I must go down as the human beings say, to whom I want to
descend. — Amity
I have a couple of translations and I can't get through this book. I don't know that I would call it 'unreadable' as the critic Harold Bloom did, but I did find the work's grandiose parodic style tedious and unappealing. I think I got about 1/4 of the way through. I'd be interested to read other people's reactions to it and find out why they like it. — Tom Storm
I suggest looking at other attempts to get a bearing on what you want to discuss. The difference between responding generally to a group of ideas and closely reading texts is large. — Paine
:up:I'd just like to take an appropriate chunk at a time and discuss, ask questions, cross reference, etc. I don't see a problem with using multiple translations. — Tate
You already posted the first chunk, so:. questions: — Tate
So bless me now, you quiet eye that can look upon even an all too great
happiness without envy!
Bless the cup that wants to flow over, such that water flows golden from
it and everywhere carries the reflection of your bliss!
Behold! This cup wants to become empty again, and Zarathustra wants
to become human again.”
– Thus began Zarathustra’s going under. — TSZ
It might be seen as a bit of a cheat and not everyone approves of using secondary sources.
For various reasons. Fooloso4 can reel them off! — Amity
Your thoughts so far? — Amity
Is it necessary to read the Intro first? — Amity
Nietzsche himself provides no preface or introduction, although the section on TSZ in
his late book, Ecce Homo, and especially its last section, “Why I am a Destiny,” are invaluable guides to what he might have been up to.
Laurence Lampert’s Nietzsche’s Teaching: An Interpretation of “Thus Spoke Zarathustra” (Yale
University Press,1986, establishes the need for a new teaching, the nature of the teaching, and the foundational role it plays in the history of philosophy. Lampert’s Nietzsche and Modern Times: A Study of Bacon, Descartes, and Nietzsche (Yale University Press, 1993), much broader in scope, goes
further in the direction of specifying the ecological, earth-affirming properties of Nietzsche’s teaching via Zarathustra.
Why is he talking to the sun? — Tate
You great star! What would your happiness be if you had not those for whom you shine?
For ten years you have come up here to my cave: you would have tired of your light and of this route without me, my eagle and my snake ...
Like you, I must go down as the human beings say, to whom I want to descend.
... Zarathustra wants to become human again.
Here he enjoyed his spirit andhis solitude and for ten years he did not tire of it. But at last his hearttransformed, – one morning he arose with the dawn, stepped before the
sun and spoke thus to it:
“You great star! What would your happiness be if you had not those
for whom you shine?
For ten years you have come up here to my cave: you would have tired
of your light and of this route without me, my eagle and my snake.
But we awaited you every morning, took your overflow from you and
blessed you for it. — Amity
Behold! I am weary of my wisdom, like a bee that has gathered too
much honey. I need hands that reach out.
Zarathustra, the creator of an ancient religion, — Tate
a mutually dependent relationship between the source of life and light — Tate
... his own being, divided by high and low: the eagle and the snake. — Tate
The point is: Zarathustra, the creator of an ancient religion, has withdrawn from the world, become full, and now wants to shine his light upon mankind. So he goes down the mountain. — Tate
a mutually dependent relationship between the source of life and light
— Tate
In what way is the sun dependent on that on which it shines? — Fooloso4
... his own being, divided by high and low: the eagle and the snake.
— Tate
Not divided but both high and low. — Fooloso4
Why Zarathustra? Or perhaps the better question is, why the return of Zarathustra? — Fooloso4
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